Let's first talk about the issue of the U.S. House of Representatives passing a bill to support Ukraine.

This may cause a global crisis of confidence in U.S. assets.

Why do I say this? The United States has always relied on its open immigration policy to the outside world, coupled with the attractiveness of the U.S. dollar and U.S. bonds, to attract global assets. The United States has maintained high interest rates in order to save the outflow of U.S. dollar assets. However, the recent geopolitical turmoil has caused many people to give up U.S. dollar assets and buy gold. This is actually a manifestation of the reduction of the U.S. dollar's hegemony.

The recent strong hawks of the Federal Reserve are also to boost the U.S. dollar index and save the outflow of U.S. dollar assets, because once the outflow is excessive, it will cause a short-term crisis of confidence.

However, although the passage of this bill is to support Ukraine and other regions, it uses frozen Russian assets.

I can't help but imagine that now Russia is hostile to you, you can freeze U.S. assets at will, so if other countries are hostile to you at other times, should they also be frozen?

So are the innate conditions of U.S. dollar capitalism still there?

So is the trust in the U.S. dollar still there? Aren't you afraid of losing the credibility of the U.S. dollar?

So the passage of this bill is a bit nonsense, and the maximum amount of this bill, 65 billion, is to support Ukraine. Below I will elaborate on how the United States "supports" Ukraine.

#大盘走势